Apple Valley, Minnesota 7 Day Weather Forecast
Wx Forecast - Wx Discussion - Wx Aviation
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NWS Forecast for Apple Valley MN
National Weather Service Forecast for:
Apple Valley MN
Issued by: National Weather Service Twin Cities/Chanhassen, MN |
Updated: 12:42 pm CDT Jun 16, 2025 |
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This Afternoon
 T-storms Likely
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Tonight
 T-storms then Mostly Cloudy
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Tuesday
 Partly Sunny
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Tuesday Night
 Chance Rain
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Wednesday
 Chance Rain
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Wednesday Night
 Slight Chance T-storms then Slight Chance Rain
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Juneteenth
 Sunny then Slight Chance T-storms
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Thursday Night
 Chance Rain then Chance T-storms
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Friday
 Chance T-storms
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Hi 84 °F |
Lo 63 °F |
Hi 79 °F |
Lo 64 °F |
Hi 78 °F |
Lo 61 °F |
Hi 81 °F |
Lo 61 °F |
Hi 81 °F |
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Hazardous Weather Outlook
This Afternoon
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Rain and thunderstorms likely, mainly after 5pm. Mostly sunny early, then becoming cloudy, with a high near 84. South wind around 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms. |
Tonight
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Rain and thunderstorms, mainly before 7pm. Low around 63. South southwest wind 5 to 10 mph becoming west northwest after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms. |
Tuesday
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Partly sunny, with a high near 79. West northwest wind around 5 mph. |
Tuesday Night
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A 30 percent chance of rain, mainly after 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 64. West northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening. |
Wednesday
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A 40 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 78. North wind around 5 mph. |
Wednesday Night
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A slight chance of rain and thunderstorms before 10pm, then a slight chance of rain between 10pm and 1am. Mostly clear, with a low around 61. North northwest wind around 5 mph becoming west southwest after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 20%. |
Juneteenth
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A 20 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms after 1pm. Sunny, with a high near 81. West southwest wind 5 to 10 mph. |
Thursday Night
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A 50 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 61. West northwest wind around 5 mph becoming east southeast after midnight. |
Friday
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A 50 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 81. South southeast wind around 10 mph. |
Friday Night
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Rain likely and possibly a thunderstorm before 1am, then a chance of rain and thunderstorms after 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 67. South southeast wind 10 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. |
Saturday
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 88. South wind around 10 mph. |
Saturday Night
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Mostly clear, with a low around 74. South southeast wind 10 to 15 mph. |
Sunday
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Sunny, with a high near 88. South wind around 15 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph. |
Forecast from NOAA-NWS
for Apple Valley MN.
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Weather Forecast Discussion
159
FXUS63 KMPX 161803
AFDMPX
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Twin Cities/Chanhassen MN
Issued by National Weather Service La Crosse WI
103 PM CDT Mon Jun 16 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Showers and thunderstorms looking increasingly likely this
morning, from a decaying thunderstorm complex out of the
Dakotas
- This will influence the potential for severe weather this
afternoon and evening, but it remains too early to say when &
where the threat may be lowered.
- Active pattern continues through the week with a return to
above- normal temperatures for the weekend.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 203 AM CDT Mon Jun 16 2025
Complex forecast today regarding the evolution of multiple areas
of thunderstorms development across the Upper Midwest, and how
they may influence our potential for severe weather this
afternoon and evening. Overnight, a shortwave tracking along the
North Dakota/South Dakota border has generated a robust
mesoscale convective system, with gusts up to 90 mph being
reported. Farther south, a broken line of thunderstorms has
developed across South Dakota along a weak surface cold front.
These areas of thunderstorms are expected to continue unabated
across the Dakotas through the early morning, with the questions
being how strong will they remain as they enter western
Minnesota, & how long will they potentially last into eastern
Minnesota & western Wisconsin. MUCAPE values will actually be
increasing through the early morning across western Minnesota as
warm & most advection continues, however deep shear values drop
off greatly across eastern South Dakota & western Minnesota.
Hi- resolution model scenarios are a complete grab-bag with
many of them struggling to resolve the thunderstorm complex
along the ND/SD border. The models that do have a handle on the
ongoing convection generally weaken the complex as it moves
through the eastern Dakotas into western Minnesota early this
morning, but maintain at least broken showers and thunderstorms
all the way into eastern Minnesota & western Wisconsin through
the morning. MCS maintenance parameters show a low chance
(20-30%) of the ongoing complex remaining severe into western
Minnesota & very low chance (<10%) into eastern Minnesota, so
some wet weather looks likely this morning but probably nothing
severe. At the same time, an ongoing region of scattered
showers and thunderstorms driven by the low- level jet will
continue into this morning across southern Minnesota.
Current radar timing trends project the weakening complex of
showers and thunderstorms reaching western Minnesota by 6-7 AM,
eastern Minnesota by 8-9 AM, & whatever remains of it moving
out of western Wisconsin before 11-noon. The question then
begins how much warming are we able to see during the afternoon
and will the atmosphere destabilize enough for a second round
of storms to develop during the afternoon and evening. The
already limited sample size we have of high-resolution models
handling the ongoing convection show a wide range of outcomes,
making this a lower-confidence forecast for the severe potential
this afternoon until we get through the first wave of precip in
the morning. Taking an ensemble of high-resolution models shows
surface-based CAPE values do recover to 2000-2500 J/kg by mid-
afternoon across western & southern Minnesota, albeit weakly
capped. It wouldn`t take much forcing to get a few storms to
initiate in this environment, and we should have plenty of
remnant outflow boundaries in addition to the weak surface cold
front, but it`s tough to pinpoint when & where this initiation
could occur. Best guess would be at least a few storms develop
later in the afternoon/early evening across west-central
Minnesota, & then potentially merge into a convective line
depending on the amount of instability present. A weaker
afternoon environment means we may see just a few marginally
strong-severe storms, while one with 2000+ J/kg CAPE means our
severe event is still on, with initial storms capable of very
large hail and damaging winds eventually merging into a line of
storms with more of a damaging wind threat & the chance for a
few tornadoes. While the coverage of strong to severe storms
this afternoon remains very uncertain across central Minnesota,
storms looks to be much more widespread across northern
Minnesota along the remnant MCV from the ongoing Dakotas
thunderstorm complex. The bulk of this activity will likely stay
over northern & north- central Minnesota, but several high-
resolution models depict a thunderstorm complex capable of
widespread damaging winds, which may dip far enough south to
impact our northern counties of central Minnesota & western
Wisconsin (Stevens County MN through Rusk county WI).
Very long story short, we don`t have a handle on how things may
unfold this afternoon at the moment, but should have a much
better idea by late morning or early afternoon when we can
better pinpoint where surface boundaries have set up & how our
instability tends are looking for the afternoon. Have a severe
weather plan for later this afternoon & evening, and closely
monitor the forecast for updates as we head into the afternoon.
For the rest of the week - the pattern remains active over the
Upper Midwest but we may see a break in the thunderstorms
midweek as the jet stream dips more southerly over the mid-
Mississippi valley. Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms
are still likely with this pattern, but models are showing a
trend towards the bulk of this activity mainly staying just
south of the area. A shortwave Tuesday night morning will
generate widespread thunderstorms and probably the best chance
for heavy rain & flooding this week, but most guidance keeps
this activity over Iowa with maybe the northern fringes of this
activity leading to some thunderstorms over far- southern
Minnesota. Otherwise, Wednesday & Thursday look notably drier
over our area aided by building ridging over the central plains.
This ridging will lead to much warmer temperatures by Friday &
especially over the weekend, with temperatures potentially
nearing 90 along with summer-like humidity. The building ridging
will also place the upper midwest under a potentially active
"ring of fire" pattern, where a number of shortwaves ride along
the northern periphery of the ridge. Pick a model & you`ll find
any number of potential heavy rain and severe thunderstorm
events, but models notoriously struggle with depicting these
shortwaves at this timescale. Confidence is high towards above-
normal temperatures and at least the potential for anther round
or two of thunderstorms, but low on where and when any of these
systems may develop.
&&
.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z TUESDAY/...
Issued at 1245 PM CDT Mon Jun 16 2025
As MVFR ceilings slowly lift or scatter out, full attention
turns to TS, both ongoing west of MSP/STC and with another round
probable to sweep east across the area this afternoon/evening,
potentially affecting all sites, with a greater probability for
TS east of a STC to MKT line. Timing remains uncertain so
amendments will likely be needed. Moving ahead to tonight,
MVFR/IFR is favored to return along and northeast of a LXL-EAU
line, affecting RNH and EAU. These ceilings should break up
west to east Tuesday morning, yielding VFR areawide by the end
of the period.
KMSP...Broken line of TS is present west of MSP at issuance time
with this expected to affect airspace around the terminal over
the next 2 hours, with the window for greatest impacts likely
focusing on 1830-1930 UTC. After these thunderstorms depart to
the east, will monitor likely redevelopment later this afternoon
and evening with potential for a line of TS sweeping eastward.
Timing remains stubbornly uncertain so have elected to cover
this later potential with a TEMPO group covering several hours.
If timing becomes more certain may convert to definite mentions.
MVFR ceilings may return after 06z Tuesday but these will likely
remain to the northeast so have omitted them.
/OUTLOOK FOR KMSP/
TUE...VFR/MVFR slgt chc IFR/-TSRA. Wind NW 5-10kts.
WED...MVFR/-SHRA chc IFR/-TSRA. Wind N 5-10kts.
THU...VFR, slgt chc MVFR/-TSRA. Wind W 5-10kts.
&&
.MPX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MN...None.
WI...None.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...ETA
AVIATION...APF/WFO ARX
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